If that is how you read that exchange then so be it. — StreetlightX
What if everyone were magically making enough income to be middle class.. all retail workers, factory workers, construction workers, agricultural workers, etc.. Everyone was making a decent enough salary to live in a house, buy some entertainment goods, a car, had all their daily living met.. — schopenhauer1
Why should I really abide by that defintion? Am I not at liberty to subscribe to any other classification of how people relate to wealth in society, and how their lot in life is determined by that? — god must be atheist
But really, a system that doesn’t consider managing capital is unimaginable — NOS4A2
Absolutely. A socialist system would have to manage it's capital resources too -- mines, factories, land, ports, and so on. The difference is that socialists manage resources for the common wealth, and capitalists manage resources for the creation of their own wealth.
and a system that is not capitalist has never existed. — NOS4A2
I don't care if you call it "middle class," or something else. No society can call itself good if it doesn't provide access to a decent way of life to everyone. A decent way of life includes enough to eat; a safe and clean place to live; health care; a decent, humane job; education; the opportunity to have and raise children; and basic human freedoms. If that's what you're talking about then, yes, that would satisfy me. — T Clark
Yes, if my unmanageable hair gets into my eyes and causes me to crash my car, then bad hair = bad health. — Bitter Crank
So needs met is more important than power differentials (only a few owners own the means of production)? — schopenhauer1
The act of managing resources for the common wealth would require a monopoly on the resources, a cabal of managers to govern it, and an army of workers to till for it. I’d — NOS4A2
Natalism: it's okay to procreate if most people are happy with their lives.
Capitalism: it's okay to exploit workers if most people are well-off and middle-class.
Am I reading in to things here? — _db
The hope of socialists, communists... whatever, is to eliminate the portion of hard work that goes to producing a profit for people who don't do a whole lot of work at all. — Bitter Crank
you either own capital, or are a worker. — StreetlightX
Unfortunately, communism doesn't give people any more control over their lives -- it just moves the power over you to a collective and shuffles around irrelevant pieces of paper called money. — Paul
can you have a hardworking owner/executive class though? Is it just "hard work" that justifies ownership? That is what this implies. — schopenhauer1
This is for all you commies. — schopenhauer1
What if ....Everyone was making a decent enough salary to live in a house, buy some entertainment goods, a car, had all their daily living met.. Would that satisfy you about capitalism, if it offered that to those willing to work? The capitalist owners are still in place and are much more wealthy is the catch.
Just like it is now
There is always that problem of individuals believing they know how to run their own lives better than some central committee. — NOS4A2
Ok cool. So needs met is more important than power differentials (only a few owners own the means of production)? — schopenhauer1
Problem is origination of capital. Not everyone starts equally. Not everyone has the chances to put the resources together. The Marxist would ask, by what right does one human own the means of production over another if we all have the same goal of survival? In other words besides words like freedom, do you like the idea that some people own how we survive and some people have to sell their labor to them?
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